Influence of national culture on mentoring relationship: a qualitative study of Japanese physician-scientists

Abstract Background Nurturing of physician-scientists is an important mission of academic medical institutes. Although the importance of mentorship in developing future physician-scientists internationally is well established, not much information is available about how they are mentored and how nat...

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Main Authors: Haruo Obara, Takuya Saiki, Rintaro Imafuku, Kazuhiko Fujisaki, Yasuyuki Suzuki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-05-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02744-2
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spelling doaj-ac17c7ae3a5c43859a8c5f0ef9fa401f2021-05-30T11:10:59ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202021-05-0121111110.1186/s12909-021-02744-2Influence of national culture on mentoring relationship: a qualitative study of Japanese physician-scientistsHaruo Obara0Takuya Saiki1Rintaro Imafuku2Kazuhiko Fujisaki3Yasuyuki Suzuki4Medical Education Development Center, Gifu UniversityMedical Education Development Center, Gifu UniversityMedical Education Development Center, Gifu UniversityMedical Education Development Center, Gifu UniversityMedical Education Development Center, Gifu UniversityAbstract Background Nurturing of physician-scientists is an important mission of academic medical institutes. Although the importance of mentorship in developing future physician-scientists internationally is well established, not much information is available about how they are mentored and how national cultures influence the mentoring relationship. This study explores the cultural characteristics of mentoring relationships between senior mentors and junior mentees of Japanese physician-scientists. Method A qualitative approach has been employed to explore mentoring relationships of Japanese physician-scientists from cultural viewpoints, through semi-structured interviews with 17 mentees who had the experience of working overseas as post-doctoral research fellow. The reflection of their experiences and the perception of mentoring relationships before going abroad were thematically analyzed by applying Hofstede’s model of six cultural dimensions as a theoretical framework. Results Twelve characteristic themes for mentoring were observed, including trustworthy dependency on mentor, embracing paternalistic mentoring, mentee’s initiative within expectations of mentor based on power distance, a sense of loyalty to mentor/organization/colleagues, family-like relationship with mentor based on collectivism, sense of security on being led by mentor through uncertainty avoidance, motivation by role modeling for the competitive academic world, and adaption of female mentee/mentor to a male-dominated academic structure based on masculinity, a long-term relationship between mentor and mentee, receiving advice for organizational continuity based on long-term orientation, putting work before leisure, and friendly relationship between mentor and mentee outside of work based on indulgence. Conclusions This study identified the characteristic mentoring relationships of postgraduate mentees of Japanese physician-scientists. Considering the importance of mentoring for physician-scientists in a globalized society, understanding the characteristics of national cultures would help in ensuring culture-sensitive mentoring and would contribute to the development of academic medicine.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02744-2MentoringPhysician-scientistJapanCultural dimensionHofstedeGlobalization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Haruo Obara
Takuya Saiki
Rintaro Imafuku
Kazuhiko Fujisaki
Yasuyuki Suzuki
spellingShingle Haruo Obara
Takuya Saiki
Rintaro Imafuku
Kazuhiko Fujisaki
Yasuyuki Suzuki
Influence of national culture on mentoring relationship: a qualitative study of Japanese physician-scientists
BMC Medical Education
Mentoring
Physician-scientist
Japan
Cultural dimension
Hofstede
Globalization
author_facet Haruo Obara
Takuya Saiki
Rintaro Imafuku
Kazuhiko Fujisaki
Yasuyuki Suzuki
author_sort Haruo Obara
title Influence of national culture on mentoring relationship: a qualitative study of Japanese physician-scientists
title_short Influence of national culture on mentoring relationship: a qualitative study of Japanese physician-scientists
title_full Influence of national culture on mentoring relationship: a qualitative study of Japanese physician-scientists
title_fullStr Influence of national culture on mentoring relationship: a qualitative study of Japanese physician-scientists
title_full_unstemmed Influence of national culture on mentoring relationship: a qualitative study of Japanese physician-scientists
title_sort influence of national culture on mentoring relationship: a qualitative study of japanese physician-scientists
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Background Nurturing of physician-scientists is an important mission of academic medical institutes. Although the importance of mentorship in developing future physician-scientists internationally is well established, not much information is available about how they are mentored and how national cultures influence the mentoring relationship. This study explores the cultural characteristics of mentoring relationships between senior mentors and junior mentees of Japanese physician-scientists. Method A qualitative approach has been employed to explore mentoring relationships of Japanese physician-scientists from cultural viewpoints, through semi-structured interviews with 17 mentees who had the experience of working overseas as post-doctoral research fellow. The reflection of their experiences and the perception of mentoring relationships before going abroad were thematically analyzed by applying Hofstede’s model of six cultural dimensions as a theoretical framework. Results Twelve characteristic themes for mentoring were observed, including trustworthy dependency on mentor, embracing paternalistic mentoring, mentee’s initiative within expectations of mentor based on power distance, a sense of loyalty to mentor/organization/colleagues, family-like relationship with mentor based on collectivism, sense of security on being led by mentor through uncertainty avoidance, motivation by role modeling for the competitive academic world, and adaption of female mentee/mentor to a male-dominated academic structure based on masculinity, a long-term relationship between mentor and mentee, receiving advice for organizational continuity based on long-term orientation, putting work before leisure, and friendly relationship between mentor and mentee outside of work based on indulgence. Conclusions This study identified the characteristic mentoring relationships of postgraduate mentees of Japanese physician-scientists. Considering the importance of mentoring for physician-scientists in a globalized society, understanding the characteristics of national cultures would help in ensuring culture-sensitive mentoring and would contribute to the development of academic medicine.
topic Mentoring
Physician-scientist
Japan
Cultural dimension
Hofstede
Globalization
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02744-2
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